Abstract
Significant areas of ruminant-grazed pastures are simultaneously covered by excreted urine and fertiliser nitrogen (N). However, the effect of overlapping N inputs on nitrous oxide (N2O) emission factors has not been studied. Three rates of 15N-labelled urea fertiliser were applied with either no urine, an autumn-urine or a spring-urine application. These treatments were applied to perennial ryegrass pasture (Lolium perenne L.) and N2O fluxes were determined over 373 days using standard static closed chamber techniques. Cumulative N2O-N fluxes ranged from 766 to 4332 g N2O-N ha–1 (0.36%–0.74% of total N applied) and were lowest in the absence of urine; however, no fertiliser rate effect occurred regardless of urine presence or season of application. Urine-elevated N2O-N fluxes followed urine applications for up to 40 days, resulting in lower fertiliser contributions to the N2O-N fluxes at these times. Total 15N recoveries as N2O-N were ≤0.04% and did not differ with fertiliser rate.
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